While the Florida legislature has two bills pending that would officially allow the ridesharing services — both very much opposed by taxi and limousine drivers — the companies decided not to wait to see how it played out and just launched anyway.

Now, their drivers face the wrath of Tampa's Public Transportation Commission, as its Executive Director has told the Tribune it would start issuing fines ranging from $30 to several hundred bucks. A driver operating without a certificate issued by the PTC could be hit with a $500 ticket, but that could go up depending on other factors.

The city is very much divided on the issue of allowing ridesharing services. Mayor Bob Buckhorn supports the companies, while some Hillsborough County commissioners call them "unlicensed interlopers" who are not following the same rules as the cab companies.

A recent editorial in the Tampa Bay Times insinuated that for-hire car services could "sprout like weeds and operate on the county's roads without any reasonable safety guarantees for paying passengers."

A similarly heated debate happened in Dallas, Texas eight months ago, a city which just today announced a proposed rewrite of its regulations that Uber, Lyft, and most of the cab and limousine companies actually liked, Dallas News reported.